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BY 

SOL. L. LONG 



COPYRIGHT 1916, BY SOL. L. LONG 









(COPYRIGHT 1916) 
BY 

SOL L. LONG. 



S. W. Anderson Ptg. Co., Graphic Arts Bldg. 
Kansas City, Mo. 



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Preface. 

To those who would criticise any of the sentiments 
herein, as being wanting in reverence, I would say: That 
I am not half so much concerned in the "God of our 
Fathers," as I am in the sort of a God our children are 
to have. 

"Him who hath an ear, let him hear." 

SOL. L. LONG. 
Kansas City, Mo. 
May, 1916. 
2120 Troost Avenue. 



NOTE — If at any time in the future this book, or any 
part of it, be deemed of value and some picnickty stickler 
for trifles — some purblind mouser for small things — find a 
few 'solecisms," or some punctuating that violates rules, 
made by those who were unable to even so much as write 
anything to be punctuated, let me say to such; that punctua- 
tion is an inspiration — not a science; and "solecisms" were 
invented for the sole and separate purpose of giving old 
maid schoolmarms, and adolescent youths, the thrill of im- 
proving the writings of genius — the glorious opportunity 
of informing the shades of the departed Masters and 
Formers of the language just how "she should be writ." 
To paraphrase Shakespeare — not Bacon — cursed be he who 
changes any of these in e^eri'.so little as a comma. 




Dedication. 

I dedicate this book to myself; for the main 
reason, to-wit: 

Because I refuse to follow the smug, conven- 
tional, beaten ways, in even so far, and little, as 
the dedication of a book. 

And ■ for the following subsidiary reasons, 
namely: 

Because it is a part of me. 

Because 1 have felt — suffered — known better 
than another — the things herein set down. 

Because I am the only one who does, can, or 
shall, fully understand an,d, therefore, the only one 
to whom, of right, the book- could be dedicated. 

Because all herein contained is the product of 
lonely hours, when no one set by me — and this 
would be sufficient reason for my seeming egoism 
in dedicating it to myself — alone. 

SOL. L. LONG. 

—4— 



The Hanging of the Parson's Son. 



They have taken the Parson's son outside; 

There's a hush in the dawn's crisp air; 
And he loolts on the gallows, as on a bride, 

And a wayward wisp of hair 
He tosses back, from his unplowed brow; 

And he draws no quivering breath; 
Although he knows, full well, that now 

He is face to face with death. 

And a Parson, called from a pile of stone, 

On whose steps a wanderer froze. 
Begins, in the form approved, to drone 

The printed prayers he knows. 
"No prayers for me! No intoned name! 

You have let me come thus far 
Alone, and hither I'll go the same; 

Be it to pit, or star." 

The Parson stands aghast and shocked; 

For his book-fed soul can see 
Naught in the words but Mercy mocked 

By the tongue of blasphemy. 
"Have you no thought of your soul," said he, 

"Nor fear of the wrath to come; 
That you stand on the brink of Eternity 

Repentant not, nor dumb?" 

Evenly answered the Parson's son: 

"I was schooled in the creed ye hold. 
For it my father gave up the sun 

And labored, 'till he was old. 
In a dim lit room, with books begirt. 

And damp, with a musty smell; 
Accounting the laughter of life as dirt; 

That he might escape its hell." 

One day he died and the Bishop came 

And, in solemn tone and slow, 
Paid tribute unto my father's name; 

And. of marble, white as snow, 
The parish raised a monument 

And 'graved thereon his deeds; 
Accounting the cost as righteously spent — 

But forgot his loved one's needs." 

—5— 



"And another took my father's place 

And the form of your creed came in 
As the force that whitened my mother's face 

And crowded me into sin. 
For the body must live; though the soul should die; 

And I had never been taught 
That creeds were an asset in commerce, or I 

Might have fought as you have fought." 

"So, I watched my mother's eyes grow dim, 

And her hands become un-nerved, 
In a tenement, owned by the Church of Him 

Whom, at least, my father served. 
And a vestryman of that church took toll 

Of my mother's needle, and I 
Became a rebel, in body and soul. 

As I watched her, slowly, die." 

"No Bishop came, when her life was done. 

And I had to steal a flower, 
From a walled-in churchyard, to lay upon 

Her breast, at the parting hour. 
No shaft was raised above her dust; 

Yet, she died my father's wife — 
And if God lives he must needs be just 

And He knew them both — in life." 

"She slipped her cable upon the faith 

In which she was born and reared; 
And this, the commentators saith, 

Is a thing much to be feared. 
But howsoever this may be; 

Whether it be truth, or lie, 
Her destiny will be heaven for me — 

As she died I will die." 

"So, save your sighs and save your tears, 

For the coward souls, and lame. 
Who foolishly, witlessly, through the years 

Are awed by a sound — a name. 
The ones who, though the dead arise. 

To action could not wake — 
The ones who see through other's eyes — 

Act for another's sake." 

"I would not whine and I would not fawn; 

E'en to escape the tree 
That looms upon me out of the dawn; 

And if, in Eternity, 



There sits a Judge, I shall let Him say 

How much of my sin is me, 
And how much belongs to the ones who pray; 

But neither hear, nor see." 

They have hanged him outside the prison door; 

And they know not what they have done; 
For never gallows of earth yet bore, 

Nor ever shall, only one. 
They will take one only from the tree 

And lay it beneath the sod; 
But a thousand, whom they cannot see, 

Are seen by the eyes of God. 



The Men Who Don't Fit In. 

"There's a race of men that don't fit in, 

A race that can't stay still; 
So they break the hearts of kith and kin, 

And they roam the world at will. 
They range the field and they rove the flood, 

And they climb the mountain's crest; 
Their's is the curse of the gypsy blood, 

And they don't know how to rest." 

— Robert W. Service. 



If heart of "kith and kin" e're broke, 

'Twas not for us. Parfay; 
'Twas at the strain of pampered pride; 

That blood of their's should stray. 
The tamed lands teem with broken hearts, 

Which burst of selfishness; 
But none are found along the Road 

Through God's grand Wilderness. 

We know where luring sky lines are, 

Unscreened by smoke or towers; 
The amber flooded mountain crests 

And dreamy vales, are ours. 
The peace we know is fathomless; 

Because unmarred by crowds; 
Ours is the canvas of the dawn, 

The sculpture of the clouds. 

The gilded hutches of the great; 

Wherein they lie and rust; 
Until the ichor in their veins 

—7— 



is curdled by distrust; 
No matter what their fashionings, 

On every entrance door 
Is mirrored, for the eyes that see, 

The warrens of the poor. 

Life, love, and laughter, jest, and joy, 

Are unstaled and the same 
As ever; though enigmas grown 

To shackled souls, and lame. 
And for that we have farther seen, 

And larger grown as well. 
The fools who loose and bind with words 

Consign us to their hell. 

'Tis not the "gypsy curse" — forsooth, 

'Tis God's own primal urge 
Held back by form — earth's princes are 

Glad victims to its surge; 
Therefore they flee the roof-tree-blight, 

And spurn the custom laved; 
Accounting as great honor the 

Tabu of book-behaved. 

We "know not how to rest" — in truth, 

'Twere despite to our code 
To teach us how and bar us from 

The unrest of the Road. 
The sky is ours; the trail is ours; 

But never ours the sin 
Of the smug, complaisant hypocrites — 

The men who do fit in. 



Jikiri. 

Jikiri, Moro chief, is dead; 

From out his mountain cave 
He sallied, with his outlaw band, 

And found — a nameless grave! 
Resourceful, valiant chief was he; 

Bold, crafty, yet serene; 
Untiring, vengeful, dangerous, 

And given to rapine. 

For ten long years he marched and fought; 
A decade gathered scars; 



He suffered for the light he had; 

He bivouacked 'neath the stars. 
And for what had he marched and fought? 

For what left home and all? 
For spoils? There was more gold for him, 

Behind Manila's wall! 

Behind him, stretching from the dawn, 

His island ancestry 
Had passed, from father unto son. 

Unquestioned right and free. 
He loved his little sea-girt isle; 

'Twas all the world he knew — 
'Twas fatherland, as dear to him 

As your land is to you. 

For, whether man's strange mind be filled 

With shadows, glimmering-gray. 
Of paganism, or the wild. 

Flushed fancies of our day, 
Love only speaks one simple tongue; 

Has one truth in her train; 
Proceedeth from Eternity 

And journeys back again. 

And love's dream-led alumni learn 

Truths held by no man's school; 
Truths none may fully comprehend, 

Much less, reduce to rule. 
In outer, vagrant, vastness where 

The dawn tints rise, upcurled. 
Their Alma Mater rests, serene. 

Outside, above, the world. 

And so this dreaded Moro chief — 

This terror of the night. 
Loved home and forebears sepulchres — 

God! had he not the right? 
The heartbeats of his tribe he knew; 

He knew his native land; 
But "destiny," "benevolence," 

He could not understand. 

That sea nursed island was his home; 

Its lotus air, his air; 
The lips that crooned his lullabies 

Had learned their cadence there. 

—9— 



There had his wondering, infant, eyes 

First looked on land and sea; 
There, to a daughter of his tribe, 

He had said: "Follow me." 

His father's grass grown grave was there; 

The tender, mother eyes. 
That first looked into his with love. 

Closed, under Moro skies; 
And, at their closing, entered in 

To that great mystery, 
Which hath its secret hidden deep 

In God's Eternity. 

There had his wild and savage heart. 

Convention undefiled. 
Leaped in his breast, when they had said: 
. "6, Chief! behold your child!" 
There he had dreamed the age-old dreams 

Which know no East, nor West; 
Dreams which come trooping with the beard, 

"And will not let man rest. 

And when the interloper came 

And bade him cringe and cower; 
He could not understand — nor can 

The alien, at this hour. 
Aye, though before high heaven's bar 

The stranger he dragged, chained, 
He could not answer aught, save this: 

"Much loot may there me gained." 

Wherefore the untaught Moro fought. 

Until was snapped life's cord — 
I would have cursed him for a wretch. 

Had he once sheathed his sword. 
And no man, save the craven cur 

Whose soul is in his purse. 
Would, had the Moro failed to strive. 

Done otherwise than curse. 

Each man whose father's kindly voice 

Welcomed him, at his birth; 
Each man who knew a mother's love; 

Each who, from all the earth. 
Chose one to walk life's devious ways 

With him, through sheen and shade, 

— 10— 



Would have the Moro chieftain cursed, 
Had he borne virgin blade. 

Each man to whom a maiden's eyes, 

In love had lifted been, 
Had he bowed down a willing neck, 

Each would have cursed him then. 
Yea, had he failed to march and fight 

And struggle to be free. 
Unto the last, each would have cursed 

Him in Eternity. 

And so they killed him for his faith! 

Poor devil! there he stood, 
Between the chains of thin veneer 

And wild, free, brotherhood! 
They had to kill him where he stood 

A menace to their peace! 
His pagan blood they had to pour 

Before their god; "Increase." 

They had to kill him ; there he stood ; 

Still savage, truculent; 
But, O, a freeman, struggling still, 

And dying thrice content! 
The little kites know where he lies, 

Beside the sounding sea; 
Hard by his sheltering mountain cave, 

A patriot, dead, but free. 

Yea, long before his slayers knew — 

Before they even guessed 
That Moro raised her fringe of palms 

Beyond the restless West, 
This island chief had learned the wild, 

Free tongue of southern nights; 
Had learned it so he envied not 

The eagle on the heights. 

Dry-eyed a Moro widow greets 

The languorous southern dawn, 
And feels, somewhere, her lord awaits, 

With all his armor on. 
A Moro man-child lifts his eyes 

Unto his mother's face — 
Deep in his heart springs into birth 

The deadly feud of race. 

— 11— 



Son's filial feet, revengeful now, 

Will seek the jungle path; 
Hard by that mountain cave will blaze 

A beacon to his wrath. 
His mercy will be gaged by that 

Which brough his sire a bier, 
And his blood-orphan's brand will make 

His hiding a frontier. 



Report of Chief of Statistics of Hades. 

The Chief of Statistics of Hades looked up, 

And he tinkled an asbestos bell, 
And said to an Imp: "Go and bring me a cup 

Of hot pitch, from the nethermost well; 
For I need something cooling; my brain is afire! 

So hurry, you whimpering thief!" 
Then he said to another: "Here! go touch the wire 

And send this report to the Chief." 

The Report: — 

" — The Chief of Statistics of Hades unto 

His Majesty; Father of Lies: 
The honor I have of transmitting to you 

A report that, no doubt, will surprise. 
We are short on pit coal at the Mail Order kiln 

And of racks at the Dry House wherein 
We prepare for the fireworks the fellows who fill 

The earth with a cheap brand of sin. 

The experiments that I conducted of late. 

By the which I sought to ascertain, 
The relative worth of a self dumping grate 

For the "Friends of the People" called "plain;" 
Have been a success and I now have no doubt 

But what, to great profit, we can 
Use them in all furnaces where we try out 

"The Friends of the Laboring Man." 

The nice, little preachers, who failed to disturb 

Your servants, for fear of their pay, 
We are using for lamp posts; for hitch racks and curb 

On the street called; "Iscariot Way." 
This reduced the surplus in this department 

So the "Standing Room Only," legend 
Can be now taken down and with safety be sent 

To "Department of They Who Pretend." 

—12— 



The "Legal Asylum for Judicial Sin" 

Is crowded to such an extent, 
That we have to use shoe horns to wedge the souls in 

And instructions had better be sent 
To our agents on earth, that, 'till further advised, 

They're directed to frankly confess 
That the definition, in former years prized, 

Is the best one for "Legal Success." 

Since we started to make incandescents out of 

The men who don't vote as they pray 
The "Lost Soul's Electric Light" stock soars above 

Par and is at premium today. 
We have solved the problem of the small hearts that pump 

Blood so cold it would put out the fires; 
We use them for clinker cans, down on the dump, 

And to insulate high voltage wires. 

The gossip supply for the "Sewer Pipe" plant 

Is far in excess of our need — 
For making this pipe they're the best thing extant, 

But I think we should curtail the breed; 
Or find other use for our surplus; for 1 

Am informed by head moulder, McTesh, 
That those that are stacked up, or lay round and dry 

Are inferior to those that are fresh. 

At the "Business Arcade," there must something be done; 

It is crowded so, here of late years. 
That all the attendants, save, possibly, one. 

Are compelled to roost on chandeliers! 
However, I'm by our designer advised 

That this glut of "Commercial Muldoons" 
Could be greatly relieved should we mold them in prized 

And profit fraught souvenir spoons. 

The captain of sailing ship, "Sardonic Mirth," 

Sent a long wireless message to me 
Of his passenger list — each one, "Salt of the Earth," 

And I told him to dump 'em at sea; 
That they should ship these is my standing. "Why?" 

When there isn't a skipper but knows 
That the top of each pile of them now is so high 

That 'tis covered with eternal snows — " 

"That is all for the present." The chief rose and quaffed 
His hot pitch; then he threw down the cup. 

—13— 



"That'll hold the Old Man for a while!." Then he laughed 

As he said: "Well, I guess it is up 
To me to relieve these congested affairs — 

Yes, 'tis up with a vengeance to me — 
This running a dump for all of earth's tares 

Is a job for your horns, tra-la-lee." 



The World's Work. 

The pride of the Spirit of Martha 

Lies in the things we can seize 
With the hands; as the ape his cocoanut hulls, 

His fish fins — and his fleas! 
The pride of the Spirit of Mary 

Is not of time, nor place; 
But to learn the truths of Eternal worth; 

By questioning, face to face. 

They met; two men; one bronzed and tanned 
By sun and wind; of land on land; 
The other; stooped, and thin, and pale; 
From measuring life by printed tale — 
From burrowing, like mole, in earth. 
In many books — of little worth. 

And he; who gave his eyes for power 

To strut a dim and fevered hour 

Before the mob; for vain acclaim — 

That some might, parfay, carve his name 

Upon some shaft, or coffin lid — 

To vanish — as old Pharaoh's did — 

Said to the bronzed one: "As I look, 

I see you have no scholar's crook. 

Your face is calm; your eye is clear; 

As one who oft has drawn anear 

To some renewing fount; while I 

To life am dust blown — dim of eye. 

Mayhap you've traveled long and wide; 

Heard much and seen much else beside; 

Read many tomes of garnered lore 

And, daily, added to your store 

Of learning: Seen, through dead men's eyes. 

All things; from earth to Paradise. 

Made their thoughts your thoughts and refrained 

From venturing — till all beasts were chained! 

If thus it be the World's Work waits 

For those so furnished by the Fates." 



The bronzed one gazed into the sky; 
Where some wild fowl were winging by; 
Then off across the shimmering lea 
To where, knee deep, contentedly, 
In clover stood a goodly herd 
Of kine — and answered not a word. 

The stooped one marked and drew more near; 

As though he deemed that dull of ear 

Must be the other, else he would 

At least have signed he understood: 

"Do you not comprehend?" asked he^ 

The bronzed one nodded, silently. 

Then he who worshiped learning's mesh 

Took up the tale and spoke afresh: 

"Work must be done! Great things achieved! 

Distress of all things be relieved 

By stress of labor and by pain 

Of body — and book furnished brain. 

The Word's Work — which we have to do 

Is: Perfect that which hitherto 

Was crude — that which hereinbefore 

Was hampered, by our lack of lore! 

But now, by adding stook on stook 

Of written page and printed book — 

By theory of that and this — 

By scholarly hypothesis — 

By years of delving in dim light; 

Perusing books, both day and night, 

We, erudite above the norm. 

Shall the work of the world perform." 

He who had traveled wide then spoke: 

"To me the World's Work is a joke; 

I've marked the Eastern potentate 

And those the Occident calls great; 

I've ate their salt and met their wives; 

Surveyed the frontiers of their lives — 

Marked that by which they set great store 

(As have their forbears done before); 

I've found them children — girls and boys — 

Save that they play with larger toys. 

Or, toys discarded, cumber all 

Of heaven's vault with castle wall; 

Fare o'er old trails; wear city street; 

Impelled by urge of fevered feet. 

And each one frays and fades his soul 

—15— 



In striving for a phantom goal; 

Makes life a jest — a morgue of earth — 

In quest of things of little worth. 

I find the work, of which you speak, 

Is done by those who never seek 

Beyond the obvious; lest they find 

That they possess the thing called mind! 

Done by the sweat of heavy jowls; 

Whose owners mouth of fiat souls — 

By psuedo scientists who are 

Content with less than prison fare — 

By swart and low-browed sons of Cain 

Who wear a mental ball and chain." 

"Stop!" cried the dim eyed. "Hitherto 
1 must admit that this was true. 
By research, book, conclave, of late 
We've proven it, beyond debate. 
But herebefore, as you will own. 
Men have done the World's Work, alone. 
Now by law's sanction — custom's, too — 
The women equal share will do. 
With woman's help the coming years 
We'll fill with triumph — toll of tears!" 

Replied the bronzed one: "I'll not own 
That men have ever worked alone. 
If good there be, if bad there be. 
The sexes must share equally 
In praise or censure, and by law 
The class of men I named will draw 
That caste of women who are fit 
Companions for their work, to-wit: 
Martha's dour sisters who, forsooth. 
Encumber age and throttle youth; 
Who, where the flowers in riot grow, 
Ply some grotesquely fashioned hoe 
And lay out paths; then wonder why 
The flowers, perversely, droop and die; 
Who flount, decry, the nightingale, 
Because it does not sing by scale! 
Who measure both the fool and sage 
By rule of dead and buried age! 
Who yardsick sin by quantity. 
Rather than essence — quality — 
Who are content to be — remain — 
Mere valets unto things — or gain. 

—16— 



Who cannot com]iiehend, nor see, 

Why, in His wisdom. Deity 

Made ordained ways tor earth and sun 

And wild paths where the comets run. 

Why He did not add to his fame 

By making orbits all the same. 

And giving to the curve of vine 

The pedants grace of a straight line — 

Thus would He their grave censure missed, 

Of: 'Amateur Impressionist!'" 

The dim eyed cried out: "Blasphemy! 

You make the specious, baseless plea 

As an excuse for you to shirk 

Your proper share of the World's Work! 

You speak as speak the indolent, 

Who scorn the succor to them sent, 

And, glorying in their listlessness. 

Drone through this living effortless; 

Thriftless; rebel to laws that we 

Ordain, that their efficiency 

May be augmented — that they bear 

Of the World's Work their equal share." 

"Hold!" said the bronzed one. "You forget 

That there is indolence of sweat; 

And thriftlessness of thrift; and worse 

Than these the modern, book-fed curse; 

That acts of parliaments, or kings — 

Can change the nature of all things — 

That we have reached a Golden Age; 

In which fiat of printed page 

Or resolution, loudly clacked. 

Has power which the Creator lacked." 

The dim eyed stood aghast, for he 
Was stark before a mystery; 
For men of sky and land and brooks 
Are mysteries to men of books. 
And mysteries they will remain 
Beyond the final day of pain. 

He who had traveled wide spoke on 
And said: "Your kind can see no dawn 
Nor sunset; nor hear echo of 
The great world carol. From above 
No dew falls for them and their gift 

—17— 



Is — leaning where they think they lift. 

They note beetle and butterfly 

And, in dementia, wonder why 

The life they see bound up in these 

Was not made into honey bees — 

And that there should be song birds, too — 

When sheep and oxen are so few! 

Each one lays unction to his soul 

That far and wide of any goal 

Would fly the arrow of intent 

Had he not happened and have lent 

The aid of a book furnished mind 

To teach God how to loose and bind! 

They mouth about: 'Efficiency'; 

But lack the inner eye to see 

Their 'Progress' means but guessing more 

On what was guessed on oft before; 

And, fatuously, strive to replace 

The gift of God by labors grace 

And in leisure to contemplate 

See nothing but sin cursed estate. 

In proof that some but think they think 

I cite their livery of ink — 

And printed page — and stick and stone — 

And borrowed things they think they own — • 

Their fatuous pride in knowing what 

The world were gainer if forgot — 

Their belief in the senseless hoax 

Of: 'The World's Work'— the chief of jokes.' 



They parted, these two men, and one 
Thought of the other as undone 
And reprobate, and wore away 
His life — for: "What the people say!' 



The pride of the Spirit of Martha 

Lies in the things we can seize 
With the hands; as the ape his cocoahut hulls 

His tish fins — and his fleas! 
The pride of the Spirit of Mary 

Is not of time, nor place; 
But to learn the truths of Eternal worth; 

By questioning, face to face. 



—18— 



The Legend. 

There's a legend 'mong the angels; how the Premier, First 
Born soul, 
Called his messenger and to him gave command; 
That he go to earth and search it; east and west; from 
pole to pole; 
Mountain, valley, lake and river, sea and land; 
And return to him reporting of his journey, of his quest; 

Whether he had found upon the land or sea; 
In the east, grown old and mystic, or the young and virile 
west. 
Any memory of the Christ of Galilee. 

How the messenger departed, down the highway of the 
skies, 
Past the chasm where the wandering stars are hurled, 
Sun by sun and void by void, straight onward as the swal- 
low flies; 
Past the loosed bands of Orion; world by world; 
Till the far and fettered stars gleamed wan and ghostlike 
on his view 
And the clamor of the earth marts smote his ear; 
Till he saw tall spires arising, pointing upward through 
the blue, 
And the battlements of heaven disappear. 

Sought he first one strong and mighty; one whose name 
was on each tongue. 
And he questioned: "Know ye Christ of Galilee?" 
And the mighty one made answer: "Go to him who sits 
among 
Many books; for he is paid to know for me." 
Then the angel sought the scholar and he found him old and 
spare. 
Stooped by searching musty tones, with eyes grown dim. 
And the learned one, to his question, answered: "I find 
written fair, 
In my books a wondrous history of him." 

Fareing forth he sought grand temples; temples risen in 
the name 
Of the Christ, and noted those who prayed therein. 
And he found them the possessors of the innocence of 
shame; 
Of the still born shame which lacks the power to sin! 
So he left them smug, complaisant, satisfied with earth 
and sky; 

—19— 



For he knew, that should he question, they would heed 
Not the import of the query, but would piously reply: 
■'Yes, we know him — we have books from which we 
read." 

Then he sought the marts and highways; women turned 
him from their door; 
Strong men pushed him from the fountains in the 
street; 
The unkempt mob reviled him, as weary, sad and sore. 

He walked the way with torn and bleeding feet. 
He passed from these to the waters, waters bound and 
waters free. 
Ever asking. "Know ye? Do ye understand?" 
As his recompense came knowledge that the followers of 
the sea 
Were full brethren to the dwellers on the land. 

But the beggars game him shelter and a harlot gave him 
bread, 
And the way-worn in the highway took his hand; 
To them he put his question; in reply each, whispering, 
said: 
"We have heard, but then we cannot understand; 
For the ones who tell us of him hunt us as they hunt the 
beast; 
Spoil us as the robber spoils the caravan; 
Count us as dumb, driven cattle, from the greatest to the 
least — 
Are they like him — they who tell us of his plan?" 

Then the angel told them of him; how he lived and how 
he died. 
How he walked the path of pain to Calvary; 
How he broke death's bands asunder and was crowned 
and glorified. 
To the end that all his brethren should be free. 
But they, wide-eyed, gazed upon him, wonderingly and in 
alarm, 
As they said: "This is the tale we oft have heard 
In calm days preceding those in which its bearers brought 
us harm; 
It compels us, but we've come to fear each word." 

Then the angel, heavy hearted, with his burden weighing 
sore 
Took his journey up the white soul's star marked way; 

—20— 



Sun by sun and void by void, until tlie dream light hovered 
o'er 
All his pathway and before him heaven lay. 
Fareing thence into the city, by the thoroughfare of Peace, 

The Master met and said: "I welcome thee. 
But what is this thou bearest? The thongs loose and 
release 
The burden from thy shoulders and stand free." 

Then the messenger made answer: "Lord, obeying thy 
behest 
To discover if earth held thee in its ken, 
I have searched it, land and water, north and south, and 
east and west. 
And I bring you here the memories of men. 
'Tis a sore and heavy burthen, but it is not all their blame, 

There is other; this I brought that ye may look 
On their laches without favor, when they seek thee in 
the name 
Of a Christ they filched from out a printed book." 

But the Master smiled and answered: "Faithful mes- 
senger of mine 
Ye have met those whom no lapse of memory; 
Nor no strong doubts, fraud engendered, can draw dividing 
line 
Between, or separate, from heaven or from me." 
So the angels have this legend of the Premier, First Born 
Soul; 
Of the messenger sent forth with a command; 
Of his quest and his returning with the record of men's 
dole, 
And the angels all the legend understand. 



The Bulwark of the Law. , 

"The bulwark of the law!" none save the fool 

And he who cozens thrift from off the fool. 

Thus speak of all that vast entanglement 

Of statutes and decisions; by which men 

Have halved their kind and, rashly, outblasphemed 

All blasphemy; by setting boundary stones. 

And drawing lines, where God doth hesitate. 

"The bulwark of the law!" Judicial owls, 
Sans all, save pseudo dignity, sit on 
Old benches; which the veriest, vagrant worm 
Would scorn as habitation; as it would 

— 21 — 



Old Pharaoh's coffin, in some museum! 

Amid the dense and ancient foliage 

Of dead men's reasoning do they sit and blink 

In solemn state. The more of light you give; 

More blind they grow; but Nature's recompense 

Strengthens their cords to hoot, and hoot, and hoot; 

"The bulwark of the law!" for plaudits of 

Pied pirates — academic ravens croaks; 

And the owl's homage — awe of lesser owls! 

Of the habiliments — accoutrements. 

Of jester and of harlequin; they lack 

Naught but the cap; the bells and tufted wand. 

(E'en these they have, in psychos; which unto 

'The jungle folk are undiscernable.) 

"Nightgowns of Progress," is much nearer truth, 

Than "Robes Judicial" for the things they wear; 

When murdering Justice; by some specious rule 

Of pseudo logic, or, hyena like. 

Robbing the graveyard of dead intellect 

And hiding both their crimes in long drawn out 

Collections of sonorous euphonies. 

"Judicial Robes!" — then justice has from grace 

Fallen much farther than did Lucifer — 

And yet owls wear them in the face of all 

The centuries sloughing off of the outworn 

And useless badges of a primitive 

Mentality; which spent its timei and strength 

In forging chains and shackles; that it might 

Return mankind to agitation of 

A rudimentary membrane; as a means 

Of thought. No doubt the angels unto mirth 

Are wakened, when they see owls sit; arrayed 

So they appear like unto toothless dames 

Who cackle in some chimney nook and live 

In past decades and talk in retrospect. 

Clothed in their "Robes" they augment all that stale, 

Soured, rancid, mess of dry-rot dignity; 

Which awes, to trembling, all the greasy capped 

And evil smelling arm pit horde of fools; 

Who dote on quantity; regardless of 

The quality of the vain object of 

Their shallow, imbecile idolatry: 

And this, whether they purple wear and mouth 

Of long descent; or fustian clothed fare through 

The avenues of life, in ignorance of 

Grandsires and grandames, and their place and state. 

—22— 



The moth would look upon their "Robes" in sheer, 
Dazed wonder and regard them much as does 
The stolid, dense, unlettered youth esteem 
An ancient mummy from the Pyramids! 

When passing on the guilt or innocence. 

Of one who steals a loaf, they rob the tomb 

Of Outworn Things; of that which is its due. 

And from their dead limb perch, all void of sap 

Or bark of reason (even void of that 

Poor substitute; the gray beard, Spanish moss 

Of legal logic — long unsepulchred.) 

These owls hoot, "Bulwark of the Law!" while they 

Who steal a state or rob a commonwealth. 

These owls brand: "Benefactors of mankind." 

"The bulwark of the law:" The rights of man 

Were hedged by the first parchment! Added ones 

Have been a slightly narrowing hedge within 

Another, or all others, until now 

The crumpled center has no vision for; 

No yearning after; nor traditions of; 

The wide sweep of its first circumference. 

"The bulwark of the law!" Once pirates were 

Much nearer manhood's measure. They dared risk 

Their necks for loot. They now have given o'er 

The cutlass; for the wanton's ancient wand 

Of cozenry, and plied a wanton's trade 

Where laws are sanctioned and where sanction is 

Raped by construction of Judicial Owls — 

If so it please the waver of the wand. 

A timid breed; these modern Buccaneers, 

Chary of all their predecessors dared; 

Yet, more rapacious; since more safe from harm; 

By reason of their "Bulwark of the law!" 

From behind which they sally, devastate. 

Loot, murder, throttle right, make refugees 

By proxy — as do all degenerates! 

Their cozenry of owls and fools attests 

Their lack of e'en a felons claim to praise. 

Were they the spawn of Satan they would bring 

Dishonor on a sire all honorless! 

If mothered by a Harpy they would drown 

In slime pit shame their slime impervious dam! 

If born in Satan's realm, would traitors prove 

Unto their country and would utterly 

Bankrupt it, were it forced to disinfect 

—23— 



Against the scourge of their degeneracy! 
They have not left the sea void of their sail, 
But, rather, joined the land unto the sea 
And made themselves a larger "Spanish Main," 
One more secure; one with no shore on which 
To raise a gibbet: One where sleep is void 
Of yard-arm visions! They have torn the skull 
And cross-bones emblem from their flag and in 
Its stead have cozened cave-man hands to paint. 
In sophist's colors: "Bulwark of the law!" 

"The bulwark of the law!" constructed by 

The morbid minded; those who mouse and mouse 

For paltry prey; by rancid reasoners; those 

Who shaiLe the compass with opposing points! 

More oft by stipend serving wights, who gain 

Their place by being pawns of politics — 

Mere pirates puppets, nothing more — nor less, 

Pouch bellied squires to a swashbuckling horde 

Of battened brigands, at whose nod and beck 

They murder Justice by old "Precedent!" 

Who stutter, stammer, catch the breath and mouth: 

"Unto our sense of justice, questions here 

Presented strongly do appeal. They would 

Be difficult to solve, were not the same 

Foreclosed by statutes, and decisions old." 

Or, if not brave enough to give this lame 

Excuse of cowards, hide behind the phrase: 

"The law says thus — but the intent of that 

Which gave it sanction was the opposite 

Of the apparent meaning of the terms 

Inaptly used." Or, failing this, retire 

And, overnight, into the statute dream 

Some word — some needed, helpful euphony! 

"The bulwark of the law!" The vast, grotesque. 
Unhewn, untempered, swallow nesting mass 
Of ruble, brings shame on the few hewn stones 
Of masterbuilders, found therein; which are 
Like sober corporals, in a drunken crowd 
Of slum caught privates, whose ambitions are 
To drink bars dry and court the courtesan. 



Rampson. 

The World gave Rampson his desire; 
Its people gave more, because 

—24— 



Through stretch of years and flood and fire 
They had followed their forebears laws — 

The laws of the man who held their mind 
In the shadow of his own, 

And drew the plan of their caste and kind, 
In the twilight age of stone. 

Poor fools! they gazed, with approving eye, 

While stick, and brick, and stone. 
He flinched from others and piled them high. 

And called the pile his own! 
Their presses and type grew weary and worn. 

From oft repeating his name; 
But they could not change the man that was born. 

He was Rampson — just the same. 

One day he died and they closed the stores, 

And down at the City Hall 
The band came out, through the crepe draped doors, 

And played the "Dead March in Saul." 
And the Spirit of music sadly smiled. 

As he said: "They are not to blame; 
By darkened minds they have been beguiled; 

He is Rampson — just the same." 

And the little children hushed their play, 

As they've hushed, since time began. 
Whenever the Angel, grim and gray. 

Has touched their fellowman; 
But Time leaned over the winnowed soul 

And said, "In spite of the name 
Their elders under their tongues do roll. 

He is Rampson — just the same." 

They buried him with the pomp of earth, 

And the fact of his decease, 
His life, his place and date of birth. 

Was flashed beneath the seas; 
But behind each tremor of cable core, 

Extoling his worldly fame. 
An echo repeated, o'er and o'er, 

"He was Rampson — just the same!" 

Then the soul of Rampson took its way. 

Self-conscious of its worth. 
Through the great white waste and hush where lay 

The trail for the souls from earth; 

—25— 



At last it came to the thrice barred gate 

And said: "I'll knock and see 
Why none upon this side await 

To greet and welcome me." 

An angel ope'd to the withered soul 

That weakly smote the bars, 
And the angel said: "Now for your dole, 

In the High Court of the Stars, 
Make answer unto what is plead — 

Full issue join with me; 
'Tis writen, what ye did and said, 

Ye may answer now, pro. se." 

"Why, down on the earth," said Rampson then, 

"My voice was heard with heed; 
1 have given enough to want-bound men 

To purchase your Master's meed." 
"Ye gave what ye filched from the way of pain 

And the poor who travel there; 
There your reward was applauded gain, 

But here your soul is bare." 

Said Rampson: "On earth I'd an honored name; 

I was honest called as well." 
Then the angel: "Aye, you may bear the same 

In the nethermost pits of hell! 
For the devils know the law of degree 

In all things — even the flame 
But wherever you stop in Eternity 

You'll be Rampson — just the same." 

Then Rampson: "Great ships have carried me 

As far as great ships can." 
But the angel languidly said: "I see, 

But did they carry a man?" 
"Why, yes," said Rampson, much surprised, 

"'Twas so on the lists, that's clear." 
Said the angel: Lists? Well, be apprised; 

It is not so written here!" 

"The lists of men, for their puny needs, 

May ansv.'er and answer well. 
But neither lists, nor the count of beads. 

Will answer for heaven or hell. 
Ye are what ye are because ye were born, 

Ye were born because ye would choose 
The way of spoil and the path of scorn 

And the road of a springing use." 

—26— 



"What profit then," said the withered soul, 

"Is it that 1 do or dare? 
What profit that I come here whole 

Or maimed, or halt, or bare?" 
"Ye had profit enough in the praise of fools, 

That so full and fair ye have known; 
But there's other in this; that your kind are tools 

By the which we chisel our own." 

"Ye might enter in where the tall souls dwell, 

The souls ye have scorned on earth. 
But ye would pray for the deepest hell 

When ye felt your proper worth. 
Then fare ye forth to the outer vast 

By the gate through which ye came. 
Somewhere ye will find your proper caste 

Of withered souls and lame." 

"The stars may freeze in the farthest north; 

The world's may groan in pain; 
The far suns travail and bring forth 

As summer clouds bring rain; 
But whether ye go by world or star. 

Or sun, or mist, or flame. 
Ye ever will be the thing ye are — 

Ye'll be Rampson — just the same!" 



Desert Song. 

The Desert is wild as a love got child, 

With a heart like the heart of a maid, 
And they who ride with her as a bride 

Have never coerced, nor prayed. 
They hold their soul intact and whole 

And pity the witless one; 
Convention dyed and satisfied 

And asleep in Custom's sun. 

Go up and down, through field and town, 

And view the hedged lives; 
The husbands yearn and then, in turn, 

The psychic sin of the wives; 
The sin of a fiend, close cloaked and screened, 

From mortal eye and ken; 
More damnable, more fit for hell, 

Than the physical sins of men. 

—27— 



"Is it so ordained?" inquire the chained, 

When a branching path invites; 
Not knowing there waits, beyond Death's gates. 

No hell like their days and nights. 
"What will folk say?" What matter if they 

Shall censure or shall praise? 
Better were you dead than that you tread 

Another man's beaten ways. 

I had rather fall, from the top of all, 

To the lowest depths of hell, 
Sans bind and chain, than to remain 

On the heights and have men tell 
Of me as a slave, who freely gave 

His soul for a purple gown 
And woro a chain on hand and brain 

To save from falling down. 

I hate your marts; they shrivel your hearts. 

And I'll carry my feud till death; 
With the fervor and fire of a fanned desire 

And the scorch of the tempest's breath! 
Your customs, too, which are part of you. 

In the scorn of the mountaineer 
I hold them all, both great and small; 

They are children of Fraud and Fear. 

Your books be damned, with them you have crammed 

Men's minds with vagaries; 
And crowded their years with cares and fears 

And a legion of heresies. 
What you b&lieve; to what you cleave; 

Matters nothing at all to me; 
Of manly men is my Sovereign, 

Whatever he may decree. 

Your vacuous smile for the weary mile 

That men must walk alone. 
Is of like worth to the gray old earth 

As your worship of stick and stone. 
Your values stamp, on home or camp. 

Is the child of Dread and Doubt, 
And your measure of sin, not things within. 

But alien things without. 

To the depths of hell your dogmas fell; 
To the pit with your theories spun; 

—28— 



By a soul distraught by a fevered thought; 

By the spell of its Ego's sun! 
I had rather stand by the stern right hand 

Of the franchised and the free, 
Than wear the chains and receive the gains 

That can be had with thee. 

With easy grace I'll smile in the face 

Of the storm which frights your soul; 
For well I know no winds may blow 

To keep me from my goal. 
The storm may rise and along the skies 

The tempest howl and moan; 
But it has no power, for a single hour. 

To bar me from my own. 

Go wear your chain of a shackled brain; 

It was forged for a willing slave; 
But those there be who cannot see 

Nobility in a knave. 
The thoughts of men who once have been 

Are oracles for thee; 
These have sufficed as your only Christ; 

But they hold no bind for me. 

Whatever you do; whatever your view; 

Whatever your estimate; 
Of me and my tribe, do not ascribe 

Our destiny to Fate; 
For in truth we be of they who are free; 

Of they who have, manly, trod 
The earth so fair, and, too, who dare 

To look in the face of God. 

Your complacency smug, with which you drug 

Your remnant of womanhood. 
That you may raise a pean of praise 

From the lips of the uncou' good; 
Is as fit for hell as all deeds fell 

Which men have ever assayed; 
Yet, 'tis yours by right of your natal night 

And your only stock in trade. 

The mark of mind that lies behind 

Your undesigned advent — 
Which brought you forth, in the sodden north, 

Unwelcome and accident; 
Which, with the dole of an hunchbacked soul, 

—29— 



Refused to stand or be 
In the company of the tall and free; 
Is the jewel of your degree. 

Your ideas wrapped in words inapt; 

Your fetich of printed page, 
No doubt are meet for your reeking street — 

Fit gods for a sodden age. 
They have filled your land with the talon hand, 

The flattened nostril and chest, 
And still more dire, have quenched the fire 

Which burns in a manly breast. 

Should I remain in your school of gain 

What is it you offer me; 
That I may take with me when I make 

My march to Eternity? 
Is it the things which make your kings 

And in which you are steeped and dyed — 
Things sans and purge, because sans the urge. 

Of the first great fratricide? 

What mark or sign do you find of mine 

That you should account me dense 
Enough to remain and wear your chain 

For your tinsel recompense? 
The mob's acclaim? A deathless name? 

What boots all this to me, 
If I be scarred, or my spirit barred 

From the heritage of the free? 

And when I have won to a central sun 

And the hand of Fame, what then? 
God! I would trade the faithless jade 

For the desert walk with men! 
For the desert walk and a manly talk 

With men whose blood is warm; 
Men who are free, who dare to be 

The foes of empty form. 

Yea, the desert is wild as a love got child; 

With a heart like the heart of a maid; 
And they who ride with her as a bride 

Have never coerced, nor prayed. 
They hold their soul intact and whole 

And pity the witless one; 
Convention dyed and satisfied 

And asleep in Custom's sun. 

—30— 



Look Out! 

Look out for the woman who once was the belle 

Of a short-order counter, or country hotel; 

Who shoved the hot biscuits or polished the plates 

And kept tab on the drummers' diversified gaits; 

If she ever succeeds in becoming a wife 

The girls that she hires, you can bet your sweet life. 

Had better step lively and keep in the clear, 

For, sure she's a lady — a real Vere de Vere! 

And if you don't know it you'll wish you had croaked 

Ere the knowledge had into your thinker been soaked 

By her hauty demeanor, her patrician air, 

Her petty exactions, her would-be-stern stare — 

If you know your velocity — what you're about. 

For the ex-hotel belle you will always look out! 



Look out for the man who from off the apex 

Of a dump has descended and learned to wear specs; 

Who stands 'round and brags of his strong Highland blood 

And acts like all else were made out of thin mud! 

But who, in real truth, gets excuse for his life 

From a nondescript bunch who dwell north of the Fife; 

The whom it would hurry, in the great race of man. 

To get sight of the natives in Northern Japan. 

You can tell by the way that he makes others jump, 

The man who has once been the lord of a dump. 

He wonders just why the Creator broke ground, 

Or dared to start things ere he happened around. 

Or why, without him, they've not gone up the spout — 

For the ex-Lord of Dumpdom you'd better look out! 

Look out for the woman who always will put 

Her praises in escrow by saying: "Yes, but — 

You know folks do talk — they're so prone to throw soot; 

I love the dear girl — I really do, but — " 

Then an arch of the brows and the Pharisee's turn 

Of the subject, a fashionable tilt of the urn 

And another cup poured in dense silence and then 

Some casual remarks about various men 

With whom "she" had kept company, then a homily 

On proper deportment, with air "look at me 

And be ye admonished that in all the earth 

There are none so pure, of such excellent birth." 

For these I-can't-err women who their own virtues tout 

It will pay to be wary — to always look out! 

— 31— 



Look out for the man with the sanctified grin, 

Who is free from all error, shortcomings and sin; 

Who thinks all who dissent from his creed should be scored; 

Who prays long and loud and advises the Lord 

Just how to run things if He would not abort 

His plan and wind up in the bankruptcy court; 

Who sings, with great unction, "By Grace I am saved,' 

And lives on the proceeds of notes he has shaved: 

Who sheds scalding tears for the heathen who live 

Far over the ocean, but who would not give 

A cent to the widow who lives near his home, 

Because the said widow refuses to come 

And kneel at his shrine and be learned how to shout — 

For this brand of sanctity, brethren, look out! 



Slaves. 

Slaves are we to foolish fancies, 
Bound by half remembered things, 

Twice content to walk as villains 
In the broad highway of kings. 

Shackled by the mobs approval, 

Overawed by eye and air, 
Lacking the poor consolation 

That our curse is free from care. 

Knowing not the power of nature, 

Fearing only social storms, 
Moulded, like the clay insensate, 

Into artificial forms. 

And the story of our thralldom 

Is the story of our life, 
And our market place the forum 

Where the simple choose a wife. 

Where they barter peace in prospect, 
For the chimera's of the young, 

And hang freedom on the slender 
Tenure of a woman's tongue. 

Slaves who suffer moss grown maxims 
To retard the march of mind, 

Scurvy knaves, who mould the present 
By the thought that lies behind. 

—32— 



Cowardly and craven also, 

Blindly driven day by day, 
Ruled, not by the force within us. 

But by; "what will people say." 

Bartering all the strength of manhood. 
All the gold of head and heart. 

For a travesty on nature 
Which the idiot calls "art." 

Slaves, and slaves without the knowledge 
Of our bondage and our shame. 

Blindly, like a pagan, kneeling 
At the shrine of place and name. 

Slaves, who sneer and take our portion 

Of the universal curse. 
For the honor of the idol 

That we carry in our purse. 

Slaves to starched abominations 
And to clumsy fashioned things. 

Bearing labels; "these are proper," 
"These are very pretty things." 

Aye, the story of our thralldom 

Is the story of our days. 
Yet, for empty smiles and phrases. 

We affirm that slavery pays. 



A Demand. 

Men, I'm tired of your dogma's. 

Running in an ancient groove; 
Weary of incessant clamorings 

For the things you cannot prove, 
And I rank myself as rebel 

To your vain and musty creeds; 
Creeds which quench each generous heartbeat; 

Creeds which mock men's direst needs. 

Too, your fevered speculations 
And your learning drive me wild — 

To the Pit with all your theories, 
Give me instinct of the child! 

Whence am I and whither fareing? 
And by what law shall judged be? 

—33— 



By the primal law of being, 
Of your dogma of degree? 

Aye, the life that beats within me. 

Surging strong, that it may find 
An expression of its being, 

Through the gateway of my mind; 
Shall it stand, at last, and answer; 

Answer singly and alone, 
For the shackles forged and fashioned 

In the twilight age of stone? 

Answer me, ye human censors, 

'Tis my right to thus demand 
That ye speak and answer truly, 

So that I may understand. 
If of right ye wear the ermine. 

Write my duty, clear and free. 
On a tablet and beneath it, 

Origin and destiny. 

Aye, ye cannot? By what edict. 

Answer me, then do ye bind 
Shackles on my wrists and ankles; 

More important, on my mind? 
Whence, to hear and to determine. 

Do ye jurisdiction draw? 
Answer! Long have I been searching 

For the sanction of your law! 

Tell me, do the ways men travel. 

Ere they sleep beneath the sod, 
Lead unto the port, Oblivion, 

Or lead upward, unto God? 
If Oblivion, by what standard 

Will ye judge desert or dearth? 
If to God, who made you vicars 

And vice-Regents on the earth? 

Answer me! I here adjure ye 

By the heartbeats of my clan 
And by the more potent passport 

Of my love for fellowman. 
Resident within my nature 

And appurtenant to my mind. 
Is the right to thus adjure ye. 

For myself and all my kind! 

—34— 



What! ye cannot? Oh, ye tyros; 

Infants crying in the night; 
With no satisfying language 

Save your paltry wail for light! 
Take your palsying hands from off me! 

Leave me with my right, my own! 
What are you to guide, or hamper? 

Let me be myself alone! 



When Are We Going Home Again? 

(See Note) 
When are we going home again. 

Back to the blessed hours; 
Back to the cool, sweet, dew-wet glen; 

Back to the leaves and flowers? 
I'm tired of all the haunts of men; 

I'm tired of witless ways, 
And oh, my heart yearns back again. 

To olden, golden days. 

So, when shall we go home again; 

When are we going home; 
Back from the fevered dreams of men; 

Back to the morning gloam? 
I'm tired of all the things I've learned; 

Full tired of the stress; 
Tired of the wanton fire which burned 

Me to forgetfulness. 

When are we going home again — 

When are we going home; 
Away from foibles festered glen. 

Never again to roam? 
I'm tired of hypothesis; 

I'm tired of fevered guess; 
I'm tired of thus, and that, and this. 

Which makes us all the less. 

When are we going home again — 

When are we going home; 
Back to the heritage of men; 

Back to the golden gloam. 
This torrid Urge is ageing me. 

Beneath the guise of Truth; 
And oh, my heart yearns, ceaselessly, 

For the simple things of youth. 

—86— 



When Are We Going Home? 

(See Note) 

When are we going home, my brother — 

When are we going home? 
The night creeps up and the wind blows cold; 
And the steppes are bare of all, save gold; 
And strange shapes dance in the gathering gloam — 
Tell me — when are we going home? 

When are we going home, my comrade — ■ 

When are we going home? 
We have wandered far and no chart have made; 
Have exorcised; but no ghosts have laid. 
The fox-fire lure of the clans that roam 
Is ours — when are we. going home? 

When are we going faint farer — 

When are we going home? 
I wonder if our eyes again 
Shall look on home — the fruitless pain, 
Born of our conning tome on tome. 
Augments — when are we going home? 

When are we going home, my brother — 
When are we going home? 

The night is black, upon the wold; 

I'm tired of gathering shouts and gold — 

I'm tired of plumes, of sound, of foam — 

Tell me — when are we going home? 

Note: I have a habit of writing- tilings and then throwing 
tliem into a trunk. Tlie first of tliese I wrote in 1910, while 
in Missouri — threw it in the trunk and forgot it. In 1914, 
while on a train in Colorado, I wrote the second, thinking at 
the time I was producing- something new. I never knew 1 
had duplicated until April, 1916. A plain case of unconscious 
plagarism on myself. It is now up to the pseudo psycholo- 
gists to see some deep, or sinister significance in this, -which 
same is undreamed of by myself. S. L. L. 



As of Eld. 

Dogma's of immortality, and gods our fathers knew; 
Were born of insularity — and nursed by shortened view. 
Our dogma's — evoluted gods — now grown unto a host, 
Have no more fact of ancestry; on which to base a boast. 
And yet, we cling unto them, as our forebears did to 

theirs — 
While the jungle damps, that slew them, creep upon us 

unawares. 

—36— 



Our idol stabling forums; where the mighty tread the 

weak; 
Our justice, made by quorums, from ideals of claw and 

beak; 
Are still our fathers crudeness; though known by another 

name; 
Though tinseled o'er with smugness are, in essence, just 

the same. 
We mouth of our "advancement" and with dulled myopic, 

eye. 
In our self induced entrancement, as our fathers died, 

we die. 

Our law, wherein we bungle, e'en in deifying gain. 

Is a shadow of the jungle; echo of the Spanish Main. 

'Tis the same sad, lethal mixture by which ancient em- 
pires died; 

By which Socrates was taken; by which Christ was 
crucified. 

Our Pilate's; "It is written," makes us throttle truth and 
right; 

'Till the urge of power is smitten by a devasting blight! 

Our customs are but gilded mud huts of an earlier day; 
With untempered mortar builded; on foundations of; 

"they say!" 
Than huts, from which we patterned, they will lesser time 

endure; 
For the thatch is placed more loosely and the door is less 

secure. 
Yet, in bald pride of mere gilders, we lay unction to our 

souls; 
That our names, as Master Builders, written are on 

Heaven's rolls. 

Wherein our elders claimed the power to change the things 

that be. 
By fiat, we at this late hour deem that, by euphony. 
We can call into being things that heretofore were nil; 
And shame the first Creator; with our formula of: "I 

will!" 
Despite our vaporous vaunting; we cannot control our 

breath; 
Nor our shuddering in the haunting shadow of our father's 
death. 

Faith, hope, and love, and gladness; death, despondency, 

and hate; 
Of our fathers, with their madness, is, at best, our own 

estate. 

—37— 



Wherein they were free, or hampered, we are free or 

hampered too; 
Born, as were theirs, are our dogma's; lilte theirs nursed 

by shortened view. 
We fight for, cling unto them as, aforetime, they to theirs — 
While the jungle damps, that slew them, creep upon us 

unawares. 



The Immortals. 

Only those souls are immortal 

Who have, rashly, lived, or died. 
For the freedom of their fellows; 

Who, gainst strong, or feeble tide, 
Of oppression, set their faces counting cross and recking 

cost 
As a privilege — not a duty, wherein urge and gift is lost. 



Biographical. 

He owned great ships, and a caravan. 

And he drank from a golden bowl; 

He mastered the marts of Martaban; 

But his was a still-born soul. 

He won to a place on power's plateau, , 

And he held it there, alone. 

But his soul never cried and they buried it deep 

'Neath mortar, and stick, and stone. 

He held the lure of the craven Clod, 

For which they barter blood 

With less concern than the Hindoo flings 

Her child to the Ganges' flood! 

And the fawning folk, with their bended knees. 

And the fools, with their tremblings. 

Made haste to bring him a crown, and write 

His name in the Book of Kings. 

He died — and the mills that grind and grind. 
For the puny pride of men. 
For a moment paused — and then ground on 
As though he had never been! 

—38— 



They raised a stone, with his name deep carved, 
O'er the case of his widowed clay; 
But they raised no stone to his soul, because 
They knew not where it lay. 

But out in Eternity's waste and hush — 

White hush, beyond our ken — 

In a sepulchre, sealed fast for aye 

By the Angel of Might-Have-Been, 

Is a still-born soul; which might have grown, 

Save for the blight of gold, 

Into that which no sepulchre 

In Eternity could hold. 



Comet Souls. 

There be strange and restless spirits 

Mixed among the sons of men — 
Comet souls; whose far flung orbits 
Are beyond the common ken. 

They, the salt of all this living; 

They, who power and progress nurse; 
They, who, gainless, bear life's burdens; 

They, who, dauntless, dare its curse. 

They, who ever tread the wine press; 

They who suffer; they who strive; 
They who, despite all revilings. 

Fight and keep their souls alive. 

They my more than comrades, brethren; 

Ever marching down the way. 
Unto where some flag of battle 

Flutters in a new born day. 

Them I reverence, love — not pity; 

Pity keep I for the ones 
Who have never marched through tempests; 

Who have never manned the guns. 



We Stand for It. 

Loud we mouth about our culture; louder of our progress 

clack ; 
We condemn the "Inquisition," but maintain a modern 

rack; 

—39— 



And our social "heated chambers" and the "thumbscrews" 

of our trade 
We extol; as being measures by which jungle ghosts are 

laid. 
Where our fathers met oppression with the bludgeon; then 

the gun; 
We cry: "Peace," or "Public Spirit," — and then stand — 

stand for it, son. 



Stand for hope — drawn men; the product of the tongues 

of nagging wives; 
Stand for women; whose brute husbands take the urge 

from out their lives; 
Stand for children of these classes; just as though there 

were a dearth 
Of the things that cumber living on this old and kindly 

earth — 
Just as though the race of progress never could be run 

and won. 
Were the runners not thrice weighted — aye, we stand — 

stand for it, son. 



Stand for pirates in our commerce; as the Esquimaux for 
snow; 

Stand for legalized brigandage, if, perchance, the guinea 
grow; 

Stand for corporate encroachment and for parchment bul- 
warked greed; 

Stand for penny saving license — from which grows the 
dollar need. 

In entail of festering customs we find that which should 
be done 

And, like shackled slaves at market, we stand for it's 
doing, son. 

Stand, like dumb and shambled cattle, and accept things 
as of course; 

Ready, at some dead man's dictum, to deny all innate 
force 

And to have it exiled, throttled, dissipated by the books 

In which youth, by rule, is simmered; by our learnings's 
slattern cooks — 

We are surfeited with "scholars" — underseasoned, over- 
done, 

For the glory of a theory — and we stand — stand for it, 
son. 

—40— 



Tell Me Where the Christians Dwell. 

Cease your praying, and your prating. 
Of your heaven, or my hell; 
Show me some of Yeshua's brethren; 
Tell me where the Christians dwell. 

Over yonder? I have been there. 
They have master there, and slave; 
And the woman who has faltered 
Has no haven but the grave. 

In yon valley? I have been there. 
There I sojourned many weeks. 
They have never trod the foothills; 
They have never seen the peaks. 

On that mountain? I have been there. 
There the stunted cedars grow; 
And the coldness of their shadows 
Makes Gehenna of the snow. 

By yon river? I have been there. 
There they dip, and wash, and lave; 
But their charity is lifeless 
And thrice ripened for the grave. 

In that city? I have been there. 
There I found a ruthless strife; 
Found it beautified and garnished. 
Paved and lit with human life. 

You can tell me, when I ask you, 
Where camp those who buy, or sell; 
But I search for Yeshua's brethren — 
Tell me where the Christians dwell. 



Fads. 

We have sleep fads, and waking fads, and food, and heal- 
ing, fads galore; 

And walking fads, and bathing fads, and breathing fads — 
and then some more. 

We follow fads as fatuously as though we were a bunch 
of fools; 

Forgetting that humanity is not a set of written rules. 

—41— 



We've eugenic fads, and baby fads, and fads matrimonial; 
For fallen man's redemption — by process ceremonial. 
With printed rule we emphasize our fad fed imbecility — 
And plume ourselves that we have made a tyro out of 
Deity. 

We have sounding brass and cymbal fads, to reform things 

political. 
And welfare fads, and uplift fads — as empty — hypocritical. 
Wherein our fathers were content to let the sleeping 

canines lie. 
We now appoint committees — and resolute and speechify. 

We have fads educational; evolved by men, whom I sus- 
pect 

Were the possessors of a breath — much stronger than 
their intellect; 

Who never knew that learning was an alien to the hot 
house flower 

And worth and wisdom not within the compass of a parch- 
ments power. 

We have fads for all who dwell on land and all who sail 
the seas in ships: 

E'en fads for killing microbes that lurk on the winsome 
maidens lips. 

We've staggered 'neath our load of fads until we've care- 
less, callous, grown; 

And too blase to institute a fad for letting things alone. 



The Crowd. 

Oh, the great crowd; the aimless crowd; the crowd that 

eddies by; 
Forever feverish in pursuit of some historic lie; 
Forever chasing rainbows, up and down the dismal street — 
With its up and down, and back and forth, of weary, 

aching feet. 

Oh, the paltry crowd; the mad crowd; that surges to and 

fro; 
And jostles in the canyon streets it may not overflow — 
A laggard to inniative — to habit overfleet — 
Wiih its up and down, and back and forth, of weary, 

aching feet. 

Oh, the sullen crowd; the fearsome crowd — a lion leashed 
by pride; 

—42— 



Cowed within dead men's bounderles; by fear of things 

outside; 
And milling, like a herd in storm, and wearing out the 

street^ 
With its up and down, and back and forth, of weary, 

aching feet. 



What Does It Signify? 

What does it signify; all the toil. 

The half requited and ceaseless moil 

In the mills and marts; the deadening cares, 

And the doubt that creeps up unawares; 

From the ditch beside the path where we. 

As conscripts, from the eternity 

Behind, march to the one ahead; 

What does it signify — when we are dead? 

What does it signify — if, parfay. 

We are borne along the entire way 

In a sedan chair — if we wear a crown; 

A signet ring; and a purple gown; 

If the crown be usurped; the gown hide scars 

Unsightly; attesting the ankle bars 

Of soul or sense; if the signet ring 

Be only the badge of a passing king? 

What does it signify, if perchance 
Some unique figure, in some new dance. 
We cut; for a paltry hour's applause; 
From the maudlin eaters of mental haws; 
Who bruise their palms and shout aloud; 
Lest they be censured by the crowd — 
The dog-souled crowd, with its neck of red; 
What does it signify — when we are dead? 



Why? 



In youth I prayed for a heart of flesh 

And one was given me. 
But I prayed unwisely. I did not know 

What the future days would be. 
I have come to know that the daily fare 

Of the heart of flesh is stone; 
While the heart of stone has meat and to spare; 

That it dines in state, and alone; 

—43— 



While the heart of flesh must beat for all — 

Must beat for all, or die; 
And know the regret of questioning — 

Of ceaselessly questioning: "Why?" 

In youth I prayed for a helping hand; 

For then the days were calm; 
And I, foolishly, dreamed that the greatest boon 

Was a fellow-serving palm. 
But the niggardly Pedro Garcia hand 

Has passed me on the way. 
And usurped lordship of sea and land, 

And lordship of those who pray. 
I stand and gaze with wondering, 

As the mad world circles by. 
And forces its gold in the niggardly hand 

While I, dazedly, question: "Why?" 

In youth I prayed for willing feet; 

For the need of them I sensed. 
They came and have borne me many miles; 

But I still am unrecompensed; 
Save with the maddening coin of a sneer, 

From the ones whom I served the best. 
If, peradventure, I came anear. 

Or stopped, by the way, to rest. 
And the purple robe, and the gold, and gems. 

And the Crowd's applauding cry. 
Is for those who ride in a Sedan Chair, 

And I wonder — and wonder — ^"Why?" 



Hygienic. 

She was tall and gaunt and her nose was thin; 
She'd a promise of whiskers — upon her chin. 
The pet obsession tacked onto her 
Was; that she was "called" as a scavenger 
Of the morals of earth and that she must rob 
All people of peace — to hold her job. 

This beautiful world is filled with cranks; 

Who make of themselves mere septic tanks. 

And settling basins, for every phase 

0.f human conduct, and through our days 

We have to stand it; for, by my faith, 

It was ever thus — as the scriptures saith. 

—44— 



Vita Vista. 

Oh, the tragedy of sowing, 'till we weary of the art; 
And its fellow; that of knowing such a little — little part. 
Oh, the tragedy of beating wounded wings against the bars; 
Wondering if there waits a meeting, somewhere out 
among the stars. 

Oh, the tragedy of reaping where another hand has sown, 
And its counterpart; the keeping that which never was 

our own. 
Oh, the tragedy of duty; with hope mocking from afar; 
Like the soul enchanting beauty of a distant evening star. 

Oh, the tragedy of wearing shackles; dreaming we are 

free — 
Greater still than this; our daring when it means Geth- 

semane. 
Oh, the tragedy of wondering whence? and whither? how? 

and why? 
As we ply our craft of blundering, with no language, save 

a cry. 

Oh, the tragedy of staying in the maddened race for gain; 
And its likeness; that of praying, automatically and vain. 
Oh, the tragedy of feeling that a despite or a crime, 
Is that thing that we are stealing from the treasury of 
Time. 

Oh, the tragedy of grieving, when we do not know the 

cause; 
Born and nurtured of our leaving all our weal to written 

laws. 
Oh, the tragedy of dwelling in the purlieus of the past; 
All the while concerned in selling souls to tabu and to 

caste. 



Playing. 

We are playing witless, aimless; 

Through each process of the sun; 
Gnarling threads from which the visions 

And the dreams of life are spun. 

Playing, recking not our gnarling 

Robs us of our first estate; 
Kenning not, where visions perish. 

Men and lands are desolate. 

—45— 



Playing, between banks of precept; 

Like some lowland rivers flow; 
With no majesty, save slowness. 

And not even warmth of snow. 

Playing, seeing joy and gladness, 

As one on a barren shore. 
Marooned, through the veil of distance, 

Sees some vine embowered door. 

Playing, knowing not within us 
Is the walled-in spring of joys; 

Sensing not the pulse we bridle 
Has the same urge as a boy's. 

Playing, shackled by our station; 

Caste of book-lore — chattle — real; 
Like the lone child of late marriage 

Plays, robbed of the power to feel. 

Playing, by the rules of dead men — 

Parents of futility; 
And our pity-gendering sporting 

Is life's staring tragedy. 



What Is It For? 

What is it for; O my weary brother. 

You who are bound in the marts of trade, 

Why do you trample and jostle each other, 
Was it for this that the world was made? 
What is it for? 

What is it for, this shortened vision. 

Purchased from books and the oil you burn; 

Learning the things, which, in their derision. 

Your children's children will strive to unlearn — 
What is it for? 

What is it for, this ceaseless treading 
Of mills that vassal the kingly brow; 

Where the toll you take is fear and dreading 
Of thing tomorrow and hate of now; 
What is it for? 

What is it for, this rush to the galleys. 

This pleading for place in their wind swept banks 

—46— 



Of oars; this content to act as valets 

To property rights, for a vote of thanks — 
What is it for? 

What is it for. this deified labor; 

This war and turmoil of brain and brawn. 
Which has no king, nor friend, nor neighbor; 

Which sees no sunset and knows no dawn. 
What is it for? 

What is it for. this knuckle knotted, 

This press that slants the brow of the child, 

Which, reinforced by a brain besotted, 
Hurls back a curse to the cry of the wild, 
What is it for? 

What is it for, this planning and building 

And razing and planning and building again; 

This surface polish and tinsel gilding 
So eagerly sought by so many men, 
What is it for? 



Requiem. 

There is no such thing as friendship, in this cloyed com- 
mercial age. 

It is interest — interest ever — which the minds of men 
engage. 

Stocks and bonds, and deed and mortgage, promise, guar- 
antee, and pledge. 

Are the modern sum of duty and the goal of privilege. 

Take the wife; what of her standard; her demandings; 

her ideal; 
Is it not outside opinion — this regardless of the real? 
Is it based on things intrinsic, fundamental, or, parfay, 
On the imbecile's foundation of what other people say? 

Take the husband; all the years elapsing since he Eden 
knew 

Should have given him discernment — should have learned 
him what is true; 

Should have given him a standard, yet he, like a witless 
child. 

Still is bound by what his fellows designate a thing de- 
filed! 

—47— 



Take the father; and the value of his offspring is the 

power 
To compel that which shall bring them praises of a present 

hour — 
To call forth the mob's acclaim and by it to be given 

place; 
Though the odor of its arm-pits make the angels turn 

their face! 

Take the mother — her ambition — and to what does it 

ascend? 
The less said the sooner mended — yet, the whole world 

knows its end. 
Place and power — before the greasy caps to strut a fevered 

space; 
All regardless of the permanence of power, position, place! 

Love? Why, love is a tradition and a specter from the 
mist 

Of the past, and more than questioned if it ever did exist! 

God? A myth. And Christ? A fancy — human heartbeats 
but a dream; 

All mankind but flotsam, jetsam, on Life's sourceless, sea- 
less, stream. 



Obiter Dicta. 



I remember the Deacon; fat, smug, and complaisant, 
Who ran the big church that stood up on the hill; 

And how each Sunday morning he'd sing, with suave unction, 
"Tell me; will the waters of Jordan be chill?" 

He owned several farms and the men who lived on them; 

The preacher was his and the opinion mill 
And its editor too, were some of his chatties, 

Yet he sang: "Will the waters of Jordan be chill?" 

I knew how he got the "home place" from his mother — 

I knew how he'd handed a lemon to Bill 
His slow witted brother and therefore concluded. 

That there'd be no water in his Jordan to chill. 

And still I am blest with that youthful opinion, 
I know it is right, if we have a just Lord; 

That all of the water that flows in his Jordan 
Will be turned into steam ere it reaches his ford! 

—48— 



Why, I'll bet that the ferry boat run by his Charon, 
Has strakes of asbestos and keel of fire brick, 

And that when he crosses 'twill be in the company 
Of men who have pushed little chicks in the creek! 

Mayhap there's a Jordan whose waters are chilly; 

If there be, it is certainly not on his line 
Of travel and what most concerns me is wondering— 

Wondering and conjecturing if it is on mine. 



The Crov^rd and the One, 

He saw the Grand Vision and, true to his clan. 

He followed it o'er the frontiers 
Of The Crowd; with its book; its bell; candle and ban; 

With its self conjured cares, fears, and tears. 

His life fires burned only as prophet's fires burn, 
And the Near G-reat came out of their caves 

To blink in his presence, then yawn and return 
To their bat cumbered march to their graves. 

Then he lost the Grand Vision and, wearied, sat down, 
And the Little Great jeered from the road; 

Where they, witless, swept by him, in buskin and gown, 
Impelled by the imbeciles goad. 

But his weariness never grew into despair. 

For the Vision, a tangible thing. 
He was fully pursuaded awaited somewhere 

For the fearless— the Sons of the King. 



The Vanished Country. 

Yes, my Fatherland has vanished; 

Sometime, while its sponsor slept, 
Down the trail; into the shadows; 

Like a wounded thing, it crept; 
And it took its language with it; 

For no more I hear the tongue; 
Which was ancient, as to substance; 

As to form; so passing young. 

Though far flung; it rolled its bounderies 
As a scholar rolls a scroll; 

—49— 



Choosing loss of place and power, 
Rather than of heart and soul. 

Had a worthy foeman menaced; 
So that, fighting, it might feel; 

It would have, unto the conflict 
Leaped; e'en 'gainst superior steel. 

But against Form's vermined beggars; 

Fiat castes, and fevered cults, 
Wage of war were void of glory; 

Void of honor and results. 
Hence 'twere better that it vanish; 

Lest it too sink with the dense; 
The perfidious of purpose. 

And the votaries of pretense. 

Better, too, my tribe were scattered;^ 

Than that they should lie and rot; 
Non-combatants, as to manhood, 

And, therefore, by God forgot. 
Better, too, our tongue be silent; 

Than that it should learn to frame 
Euphonies that serve no purpose; 

Save obesience to a name. 

Yes, my Fatherland has vanished; 

I know not where it has gone. 
Mayhap I shall find its bounderies 

Just a little farther on — 
Better neither land, nor fellows. 

Than to fraternize, or tent, 
With the smug, who mine the slag dump 

Of the past; for precedent. 



Song of the Soldier. 

We're "civilization's pioneers," whatever that may be; 
There ain't no lands we haven't seen an' there ain't any sea 
We haven't sailed; no mountain top on which we haven't 

stood; 
There ain't no heathen people's but what knows our aim is 
good. 

Refrain — 

Ho, it ain't the government what hurts; 

It ain't no bloomin' king; 
It ain't the boys in flannel shirts — 
Lor' it ain't anything 

—50— 



That you can see along the way from Bombay to the Mall! 
It's just the devil rollickin' an' rompin' through us all! 

We're of the white, or ruddy, strain — the best Gawd ever 

made. 
And self-appointed guardians of every other shade. 
We're generous with our docile wards; from them we lift 

the curse 
But, Lor', we kills the malcontents — before they gets so 

worse! 

Refrain — 

We're needin' of some lumber, for to dot our conquests o'er 
With places where the rich may sin — with hovels for the 

poor! 
The heathen ain't a-botherin' us, but, Lor', his mind is dim, 
And then his lands are fertile, so we're due to bother him! 

Refrain — 

And over in the Philippines they're gobblin' up their lands, 
An' down along the Congo Belgium's choppin' off their 

hands! 
They're civilizin' 'em with guns, all over the Soudan; 
An' plantin' in the Orient, "Our Brotherhood of Man." 

Refrain — 

An' when we sees an island a-nes'lin' in the sea 
An' only room on it for one, we knows who it'll be 
Who'll be the sole inhabitant; we knows who'll ring the 

knell 
Of barbarism — if that isle has things what we can sell. 

Refrain — 

We sends 'em missionaries for to elevate 'em some 

An' what we can't kill with our guns we shuffle off with 

rum. 
We're liberal with our Holy Writ — we're willin' for to trade 
The precepts what we never use, for place to stick a spade! 

Refrain — 

England's caressin' Thibet an' a-fondlin' Aff'gan'stan; 
An' if the Roosian Bear crowds down she'll trade him, 
man for man, 

—51— 



The best blood of her island for frost bitten blood and 
slow — 

For brothers blood — blood cooled and chilled these thou- 
sand years in snow. 

Refrain — 

An' whether 'tis for Wilhelm, who boasts of, "Me an' God," 
Or for some other sovereign — or just a tuft of sod — 
The cry of, "for your country!" or even, "common good!" 
Sends us before the god of war to pour our cup of blood! 

Refrain — 



Larceny. 

Just today my boy was telling me about his algebra; 
I asked him about the chipmunk and he said: "I couldn't 

say." 
I have tried to do my duty, but it causes some annoy 
To reflect, I've beat him out of what is due to every boy. 

When I think about the boys and girls we're fitting for the 

strife 
With the world, I wonder somewhat if they get their share 

of life; 
Wonder if this feverish pushing, that on every hand I see, 
Isn't just another form of well-intentioned larceny. 

They have more of passing knowledge and there's other 

things they know. 
But they cannot see the pictures I beheld long years ago; 
There are some things where I ended just about where they 

begin. 
But they cannot land a croppie with a hook made from a 

pin. 

They may write, in shining letters, in the modern hall of 

fame. 
But I've felt a grander thrill, when on the beech I carved 

my name. 
With her name just underneath it; and then ran away for 

fear 
The bunch would come and catch me and yell "girl-boy" 

in my ear. 

They have mastered seas and rivers, where I only knew 
the creek, 

—52— 



But they couldn't set a trap to catch a muskrat in a week; 
They can tell about the craters and divisions of the moon; 
But they've missed the thrill at midnight, when the dogs 
had treed a coon. 



A Prayer. 

From the highbrow fraternity; 

In Time and in Eternity, 

Great Lord of Hosts deliver me — 

— of them I'm weary. 
'Tis they who bind an innane girth 
Of speculations round Thy Earth; 
'Tis they who strangle, ere their birth, 

Joy and things cheery. 

Deliver me! for I reflect 

That stronger than their intellect 

Their breath is — forsooth, I suspect 

They know it. 
And conscious of their low estate 
Of matter gray they prate and prate, 
Sans^germ of idea in their pate — 

Sans aught to grow it. 

They've peopled water, earth and air 
With vengeful foes. If nest of mare 
We prove their mouthings; they but stare 

In proud disdain. 
And conjure up some other shape, 
Bidding the tired world stand agape — 
When we their new invention rape — 

Invent again. 

With flora of their microscope, 
And fauna, we must ever cope, • 
And this without one ray of hope — 

If we must heed them. 
The race has weathered storm, and sword, 
And pestilence; now by Thy Word 
Crush them, with their dire horrors, Lord; 

We do not need them! 

But if we must be thus accurst, 
Send Death and let him do his worst; 
E'en Death is kinder, for he durst 

But once to harm us! 
While they, but their continuing cry, 

—53— 



Compel us every day to die, 
By some truth-masquerading lie 
To fright — alarm us. 



Realization. 

I know now why Mohommed sought the caves and lingered 
long; 

And why, aforetime, Moses listened to the desert's song; 

Why every people's prophet against the priesthood cried; 

And why John Bunyan languished; why Christ was cruci- 
fied. 

I now know why usurpers back to the yester hark; 

And why each people's savior has sprung from out the 

dark; 
Why history is the record of they who walked alone; 
Why there were unknown mothers of sons forever known. 

I know now why the fountain of, seeming, bootless tears 
Has, ceaslessly, been flowing through all the turbid years; 
And why life's far flung circle is but a segment trod; 
Then sweeps within the shadows, to lose itself with God. 

I now know why oppressors must, wolflike, hunt in bands; 
Why Liberty must fashion, with custom shackled hands; 
And why Death, the grim reaper, has seeming, naught to 

give; 
Save rest, and why he takes us just when we've learned to 

live. 

Wherefore, the old rebellion that surged within my soul, 
Gainst cares, and fears, and sorrows; iniquity, and dole; 
Has furled and cased its colors, and entered into rest — 
For that through all runs purpose and things that be are 
best. 



The Chained Tyrant. 

When man first rolled to the mouth of a cave 

A stone, to stay the rush 
Of the lion, or wove a barrier of thorns 

In the heart of the primitive brush; 
He might have slept, by night, alone. 

In the crotch of a giant tree; 
And roamed secure, with his club by day; 

—54— 



A lonely soul — but free! 
But he chose the toil at the caverns mouth, 

And the jungle vigil behind 
The loose knit barrier his clumsy hands 

Had twined and intertwined — 
Why did he weave the barrier of thorn? 

And why did he roll the stone? 
Why did he toil — this jungle man — 

Was it just for himself alone? 

He pulled the brush from a bit of ground 

And digged it, with his hands; 
He fought, with the birds, that flew in flocks; 

With the beasts that ranged in bands; 
For his planted seed, for the growing stem, 

For the harvest of ripened grain — 
Fought when there was food, and to spare, for him, 

In the forest and on the plain! 
He gathered his grain while the distance called 

And beckoned, early and late; 
But his ears were deaf, as the ears of love 

Are deaf to the words of hate. 
Why did he dig and why did he plant? 

Why guard what his hand had sown? 
Was it only the urge of a primitive whim? 

Was it just for himself alone? 

Then he reared, by his subdued bit of earth, 

A hut, with a roof of straw; 
And he threw his jungle freedom down 

And bound himself with law! 
The law of vigils; the law of toil; 

The law of a garnered store; 
The law of the hut, with himself to stand 

In the breech, as a living door. 
The law, with no clergy benefit; 

The law of the track and pace; 
The law that makes him one woman's pawn. 

But allows her child his place! 
The law that grinds him as grist between 

The upper and nether stone — 
Why did he barter his gold for dross? 

Was it just for himself alone? 

What profit is bounderies unto man? 

This old world still is wide — 
But he ever has stablished them, with his blood. 

For the woman by his side. 

—55— 



And she, in her thrice walled capital, 

Dishevelled and bathed in tears. 
Has borrowed the Captives witless taunt 
. And dins it into his ears! 
"Unfeeling! heartless! tyrant!" he hears; 

As he changes his wheat for chaff 
And smiles to hide the robbery; 

Or masks a groan with a laugh! 
If tyrant he be; with a tyrant's tears 

Have the fields of the world been sown- 
And what of the goal of his tyranny? 

Is it one for himself, alone? 



Song of the Pirate. 

I am the Pirate, with none to thank 

For the place I hold; let 'em walk the plank 

Who dare resist when my flag's unfurled 

To the craven gaze of a cringing world. 

My keel of oak, that parts the blue. 

Was hewn where the Constitution grew. 

I set my course where the strange sea streams 

Run full of the tears of vanished dreams. 

And the gulls that fly beyond my ken 

Are the hope-drawn souls of my fellow men. 

I am the Pirate; my grappling hooks 

Are formed of the reasoning found in books; 

And my boarding pike and my keen cutlass 

Of the fool's desire for a ruling class; 

My sails are formed of an ermine robe, 

And my treasure cave is the whole round globe. 

The wind by which my sails are bent 

Is blind regard for a precedent. 

My augur for greater spoil ahead 

Is the words of men who have long been dead. 

I am the Pirate; God help the wight 

Who seeks his safety in arms, or flight. 

For his feeble arms, when matched with mine. 

Are as night to day; as mist to wine; 

What matters to me if he turn and fly? 

In every harbor my consorts lie; 

And there are no winds on the wild sea trail 

Save those that speed a friendly sail. 

I am the Pirate; my robber's den 

Is paved and walled with the skulls of men. 

—56— 



An Oath. 

By the code by which the angels hold; 

By the faith the fathers held; 
By the power of love, or sword, or gold; 

By the strength of a fate, compelled; 
By the urge that riots the worlds between; 

By the promise of Holy Writ — 
I had rather be lowbrowed, dense and mean 

Than a polished hypocrite. 

By the brethren of the Central Sun; 

By the world's they hold in pawn: 
By the lawless paths, where the comets run; 

By the fount whence power is drawn; 
By great Orion's loosened bands; 

By the cluster which charts the seas — 
I had rather want, in barren lands, 

Than callous an hypocrit's knees. 

By the sword of the Angel of Recompense; 

By the Ark of the souls of men; 
By all things now and all things hence; 

By all things which have been; 
By the Mace of the Marshall of the thrones 

Where Justice and Mercy sit — 
I had ratjier be soulless as the stones. 

Than endowed — and an hypocrit. 



My Country — I Would Sing. 

Oh, my country, proud and boastful; 

Land where seers are crucified; 

With your by-ways lined with lunkheads 

And your highways paved with pride; 

I would sing of you, so raucous 

That the fiends would be content; 

If I only knew a measure 

That would fit the "Copper Cent!" 

Oh, my country; widely touted 
As the Pilgrim's legacy — 
Fancied by the Chump and Chumpess: 
"Fair land of the brave and free!" 
I would sing loud of thy freedom; 
If I knew just how, and where, 
I could find it — mayhap track it 
To its ego ermined lair. 

—57— 



Oh, my country; fattening pasture 
For pirate and hypocrit; 
And an early frost for wisdom, 
And a parching drought for wit; 
I would sing of thy green pastures. 
Roamed by Covin and her foal; 
If desire were strong within me 
To assissinate my soul! 

Oh, my country; wed to Mammon, 
That you might acquire a name; 
Glorying in your prostitution; 
Heralding afar your shame; 
I would sing of you 'till echoes 
Bounded back from heaven's wall; 
If this were the only living — 
If I knew death ended all. 



To the Fighting Man. 
A pean to the fighting man; God bless his potent arm; 
He wields the sword in virtue's cause, he shields the 

weak from harm. 
Hosannas raise, through darksome days, unto the man 

who dares 
To battle wrong, though it be strong — e'en on the altar 

stairs. 

A garland for the fighting man; though non-combatants 

jeer; 
He hears and heeds the far off sounds, echoes of what is 

near. 
And hearing these, on every breeze, he recks not of the 

cost 
As reckoned by the bloodless fry — if honor be not lost. 

All honor to the valiant soul, unto the fighting man. 
Who bravely dares, in these dull times, to stretch to 

Nature's plan; 
Who, while alert, leaves his desert unto the Great Assize 
Which shall convene, sometime, between the two eterni- 
ties. 

God bless the noble fighting man — God be with him al- 

way — 
His is the burden of the hour; the welfare of the day. 
Unto is hand, in every land, is given reckoning; 
And whatso'er betide us here the fighting man is King. 



God grant that when the fight is o'er and we shall journey 

hence 
To claim our due, whate'er it be, by law of recompense, 
That men may say, in that last day, as they each record 

scan 
"Give him his meed, he was indeed a man — a fighting 

man." 



Peace — Peace — Peace. 

"Peace, peace, peace," I hear you crying; 

'Till the sound fills earth and sky; 

And I wonder, wonder, wonder 

What it is you mean thereby. 

Your conventions reek complaisance 

At the havoc of your hands — 

Itching palms, grown talon fingered 

For the throats of weaker lands! 

"Peace," the sound itself is tainted 
And the reason for the cry 
Is that profit's source has shifted — 
Not concern for those who die! 
Millions have gone down, untimely. 
Ever since the dollar reigned. 
Just as useless, and with lesser 
Glory than in war is gained. 

When the clod falls on the coffin 
Of the toiler, commerce slain, 
Does his widow feel less anguish. 
Or his orphan milder pain; 
Than the widow, or the orphan, 
Of the one who, valiantly. 
Took the long trail to the sunset 
From a sulphurous canopy? 

Watch the army your stern bugles 
Call to suffer and endure — 
It is going to the slaughter 
Just as swiftly; just as sure! 
Oh. you cowards! base and bloodless! 
Who, like chastened puppies, whine 
For free let to wage your carnage 
In the factory — in the mine! 

—59— 



What is war and what is carnage? 
Bah! you hypocrits and dense — 
You who wage it on your pavements; 
Wage it neath a false pretense; 
You have, ruthless, mired your betters 
In a softened muscle's slough; 
Through you womanhood has fainted 
As at no time hitherto. 

Oh, the mockery of your mouthings — 
Oh, the hollowness; the vain. 
Vaporous, vaucous, vaunting frothings; 
Which you use, as cloaks for gain — 
Use to lure the life raped toiler 
Into trading brain and brawn 
For your brazen whistles blowing 
Raucous insults at each dawn. 



The White Man's Law. 

The white man's law is: auto-praise; 

Its sanction, the blunder whereby he lays 

The flattering unction to his soul 

That his ways are God's and heaven his goal; 

That the unctions groan, and the pious roll 

Of eyes to'ard heaven; his thrice grudged dole; 

The price of its winning pays. 

The white man's law is an unrhymed dirge, 
That rolls o'er his own, in surge on surge, 
When forth it widens; but to find 
The broken meats, where another dined. 
It is not the power of brain, of mind. 
But the power of his fashionings lies behind 
His boast of, "Cosmic Urge." 

The white man's law is a law of tears; 

Of red days, weaving marauding years; 

Of worship of stick, of staff, of stone; 

Of grotesque fashionings of his own; 

Of the farthing, unto the guinea grown; 

Through the widow's cry — the orphan's moan; 

Through his gods, with their phantom fears. 

The white man's law is the printed word; 
With no root in, nor has it stirred, 

—60— 



E'en his own heart; nor met one need, 
Save police the way that his sateless greed 
May not be hampered, nor slow of speed; 
As it hell-ward roars, for it's Master's meed — 
For the crown to be conferred. 

The white man's law is a rule of flaws; 
Entrenched in talons, and beaks, and claws — 
In ruthless claw and talon and beak, 
For the tawney tribes — for the so-called weak; 
But, doubtless, strong, if perchance you seek 
For strength within and not in the sleek 
Vestments of a covined cause. 

The white man's law is a law of snares; 
From his fraud dyed marts to his altar stairs; 
From his fancy's children to work of hands; 
From his untamed wastes to his slave tilled lands; 
From his plighted troth to it's broken bands; 
From its incoherent, vain commands 
(Which he neither heeds nor understands) 
"To the blasphemy of his prayers. 



Millweary. 

I'm weary of returning naught; 

Soul weary of the stress. 
And if this be a coward's thought 

'Tis manly to confess. 

All of the tinsel joys of sense 

We jubilantly grasp. 
Have at the last the recomjiense 

Found with a bosomed Asp. 

Despite Life's fleeting, febrile spawn 

Of visions roseate; 
At noonday, sunset, midnight, dawn, 

We cast the dice with Fate. 

The world-old question still remains 

Unanswered, as of yore. 
And in the castle of our pains 

No casement is, nor door. 

—61— 



Amid the utter weariness 

Of printed page on page 
Man's soul grasps hungering, in duress, 

As in the elder age. 

We war for who will pay the price, 
In fruit of blood-hewn mines, 

And flags stained with a damned device 
Go fluttering down our lines. 

One faints beside the camel's girth — 

Another takes his place — 
This is the legacy of earth; 

The urge-fruit of the race. 

Wherefore I'm weary of the stress 
With all its wealth of naught 

And hold it manly to confess — 
Whate'er you brand the thought. 



Question. 

Whence came it — the idea of hell — 

A rubbish heap, unsituate? 
For its cause must have been, as well 

As good cause to perpetuate. 

The Answer. 

The gain-mad masters of the leas; 

The gold-crazed captains of the town— 
Who would with lights fit honey bees; 

So they could labor, post sun-down — 

Myopic imbeciles who curse 

The world by assumed guardianship; 
Who, like a miser, guard their purse; 

But shower charity of lip — 

The neo-pagons, who attempt 

To take the fables from mankind — 

Not that they may leave them exempt; 
But may their own upon them bind — 

The academic owls who pose 
As vicars of the Absolute; 

—62— 



With power to open and to close; 
Usurping His prime attribute — 

The stupid, stolid, pulseless clan. 

Whom Learning, from her dust cloth, shook; 
Who never see sun, earth, nor man; 

Save through the dimmed glass of a book — 



The slaves who, willing, wear the chains 
Of speech, or habit, who aspire 

To nothing higher than the pains 
Of a majority desire — 

These are the scourge; for which there came 

The Prophet-sons of Deity 
And rolled the idea in the name; 

"Gehenna" — or like euphony. 



Don't. 

Don't take this life too seriously. 

It really does not pay. 
We're here for such a little while. 

Then out and far away. 
What yesterday we coveted, 

And deemed was learning wide, 
Today is useless theory — 

Discarded, thrown aside. 
And what today we think has worth. 

Sufficient to repeat, 
Tomorrow we will romp upon — 

And do this with both feet. 

Mohammed was a serious chap 

And wore a sober brow. 
Habitually, but I would ask; 

Where is Mohammed now? 
The lowest camel driver who 

Loafed, loved and drank and sang. 
Until the dim Arabian vales 

With raucous echoes rang. 
Is, mayhap, as well off as he 

And in the day of pain 
May have much less to answer for 

And hence much more to gain. 

— 63— 



Just rampse around through history — 

And legendary days — 
And you'll conclude the serious folk 

Were earth's profoundest jays 
Take all the great philosophers 

Who lolled in learning's lap, 
And every warrior, small and great, 

Who ever changed the map; 
And every king and potentate; 

And every Gallahad; 
And you'll discover seriousness 

Is somevv^hat to the bad. 

The scrap across the water, which 

Is making sundry ghosts. 
Comes from the serious carrying out 

Of several serious boasts, 
Things over there had progressed so 

A laugh was out of style — 
One man got so he couldn't say: 

"Me undt mein Gott" — and smile. 
And so he cut his navy loose; 

His army mobilized; 
And for his stupid seriousness, 

Europe is blood baptized. 

So don't take life too seriously — 

It really does not pay — 
And then, besides; it is the seed 

Of trouble anyway. 
True, purposeless frivolity 

Brings regrets in its wake; 
But even it, ne'er started wars 

Nor burned folks at the stake. 
If you must choose between the two 

Pass up the serious side — 
Remember that the serious folks 

Died as the frivolous died. 



—64- 



